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5/8/2017
1
Providing Coaching for Practice Change: Supporting Teachers to
Implement Evidence-Based Practices
Lise Fox
University of South Florida
RP²: Reaching Potentials through Recommended Practices
Today’s Discussion
• Role of the Coach
• Defining Practice-Based Coaching
• Coaching Challenges and Strategies
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The External Coach
• Linked to an outside agency/team to ensure that training is translated to practice
• Works directly with teachers and/or teams to ensure implementation fidelity
• Facilitate the collection of data to use for decision making and evaluating outcomes
Implementation of Coaching
• All internal coaches use research‐based strategies to support adult learning and professional development
Quality Coaching
• All teachers and staff use Recommended Practices
Quality Teaching • All children are engaged
and learning
Quality Learning
External Coach
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The Internal Coach
• Develops a coaching relationship with the teacher or practitioner
• Provides frequent coaching sessions and monitors teacher’s growth with implementation
• Guides professional development experiences to assist the teacher
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Where do you stand?
Let’s discuss some of our perspectives about coaching.
Where do you stand
• The primary goal of coaching is to provide teachers with emotional support and opportunities for reflection about their work
• Coaching works best if the person providing coaching support does not have a supervisory relationship with the teacher
• Providing corrective feedback is not an appropriate coaching practice
• In coaching, the teacher should set the agenda for all activities
• Coaching works best if the person providing coaching lets the coaching agenda develop organically through the relationship with the teacher
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Coaching
• Coaching Is– Collaborative
– Interactive
– Focused on skill-building
– Reliant on observation and feedback
– Goal-directed
– Outcomes-driven
• Coaching Is Not– Just providing
advice/tips
– Supervision
– Modeling
– Training with classroom observation
Practice-Based Coaching
Practice-Based Coaching is a cyclical process for supporting practitioners’ use of effective
teaching practices that lead to positive outcomes for children. The coaching-cycle components are
(1) planning goals and action steps, (2) engaging in focused observation, and
(3) reflecting on and sharing feedback about teaching practices. Practice-Based Coaching
occurs within the context of a collaborative partnership.
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Practice-Based Coaching* FRAMEWORK
Recommended Practices
*Adapted from the National Center for Quality Teaching and Learning, 2012http://eclkc.ohs.acf.hhs.gov/hslc/tta-system/teaching/center/development/coaching.html
ACKNOWLEDGMENT
Practice-Based Coaching model is adapted with permission from coaching models that have been empirically examined and have
promising evidence to support the efficacy of the model to support effective teaching practices that lead to positive outcomes for children (IES research grants R324A070008, R324A070212, R324A110173).
The National Center on Quality Teaching and Learning has developed materials and guidance for defining and implementing Practice-Based Coaching.
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What Skills/Competencies are Needed by a Coach?1.
2.3. 4. 5.6.7.8. 9.10.
Jot down your list of 10 characteristics, skills, or
knowledge
Characteristics of a Collaborative Partnership
• Shared understanding about the goals of coaching
• Shared focus on Professional Development
• Posture of support
• Rapport and trust
• Choice
• Ongoing communication and support
• Celebrations
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Building Relationships/Developing Coaching Partnerships
• Orientation to coaching• Focus for professional development• Clarifying expectations• Review of agency/program policies and
procedures related to coaching issues• Establishing a good sense of individual
provider’s strengths, learning style, culture and needs
Developing Coaching Partnerships (cont.)
• Willing to partner, not coerced
• View coaching as beneficial
• Understand coaching will be support, not evaluation
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Establish coaching as a “Safe Place”
– Non-evaluative environment
– Strong collaborative partnership
– Clearly defined roles
– Transparent data collection
Coaching & Supervision
Coaching Agreement
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Shared Goals and Action Planning
• Identify, clarify, and verify goals
• Goals that are specific, observable, and achievable
• Action plan to guide collaborative coaching partnerships
Goal Setting
• Goal setting refers to a collaborative process in which a teacher & coach select and write goals based on identified needs
• Well‐written goals facilitate coaching
• Goals should be specific, observable, & achievable within a defined time frame
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Information Might Be Gathered About
1. how often a teaching practice is used (frequency)
2. how well a teaching practice is implemented (quality)
3. how confident a teacher is when using a teaching practice (self-efficacy)
4. what a teacher believes about how a practice impacts children’s learning (teacher beliefs)
What kinds of goals are we talking about?
• In practice‐based coaching, shared goals should be focused on:
–A teaching practice or set of teaching practices that support child learning
– Supporting a teacher’s confidence and competence to use these practices
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RP²: “What” of Goal Setting
• Teacher’s identified goals
– From training discussions
– From program discussions
• Program identified goals
• Classroom observation = RP²OS‐C
• Support related to individual children/families
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RP²: “How” of Goal Setting
• Collaborative: Coach brings information and observation and the teacher has information and observations
• Choice: A discussion results in pinpointing goals that the teacher wants to address or agrees might be a priority
• Focused: A small set (2 or 3) of achievable goals are identified
Tools to use:
– Teacher brings initial goals from the practitioner training
– Coach has data from the RP²OS‐C to share and use
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Using the RP² Observation Scale• Why
– Provides a global assessment of teacher strengths in using RP
– Provides information on where to begin with coaching that might be used by coach in discussion about action plan goals
• How
– Complete after sufficient observation to see a full day of classroom activities
– Conduct observation and ask interview questions
– Take notes on what you see and score later
• When
– Before Coaching Begins; At the end of the school year
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Recommended Practices Observation Scale – Classroom (RP² OS-C)
Sample Family Practice and Indicators
6. Practitioners and the family work together to create outcomes or goals, develop individualized plans, and implement practices that address the family’s priorities and concerns and the child’s strengths and needs. (F4) – INTERVIEW
• Practitioner discusses with the family which of their everyday activities, routines or opportunities they think the family could use to promote the child’s learning outcomes or goals for child’s learning.
• Practitioner and family observe the child in multiple contexts to identify the child’s interests, strengths, and challenges in learning activities in order to develop plans/goals and learning activities.
• Practitioner helps the family identify and use learning activities that address the family’s priorities and concerns and the child’s strengths.
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Indicators
Practice
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DEC Recommended Practice Products
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Example of aPerformance Checklist
Each checklist is formatted in the same way for consistency across topic areas
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Goals Action Plan
An action plan is developed to support the achievement of goals throughout the
coaching process
What is an Action Plan?
• An action plan is a “working” document that describes:
– Goal(s) that will be the immediate focus of coaching
– Planned actions or action steps for supporting the teacher to use the teaching practice(s)
– Explicit statement about when the goal will be achieved
• An action plan might include supports or resources needed and a timeframe for completion
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Example Format
Adapted from: Steps to Success. (2005) Professional development plan. Resource for Steps to Success: An Instructional Design for Early Literacy Mentor-Coaches in Head Start and Early Head Start. Available from HHS/ACF/ACYF/HSB at http://eclkc.ohs.acf.hhs.gov/hslc/hs/resources/video/STS
Example Format
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Data and Priorities: You Observe Emily
1. Practitioners, with the family, identify skills to target for instruction that help a child be adaptive, competent, socially connected, and engaged and that promote learning within and across activities and routines that occur in natural and inclusive environments. • Emily has two children who struggle with engagement and have more
intensive learning needs (Krissy and Logan). She is unsure about how to support them. There is not a written plan for what skills will be taught within activities or how to support their engagement.
2. Practitioners gather and use data to inform decisions about individualized instruction. • Emily does not gather information or data systematically on individual
children with intensive needs.• TS Gold is used to track the progress of all children, but data are not
reviewed regularly and decisions for changes in support/instruction made using the data
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Emily wants to learn
• How to structure circle time so that Krissy and Logan are actively engaged
• How to use peer-mediated strategies so that Krissy and Logan are interacting with other children during center time and increase their language, social interactions, and appropriate play with toys
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What might be initial goals?
• Think about your observation and what Emily wants to learn how to do.
• Write down 2 possible action plan goals.
• Be prepared to share back your suggestions of what might be appropriate action plan goals and how you selected them.
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Shared Goals and Action Planning support…
• What the coach will focus on during observations
• What the teacher will do in his/her classroom when the coach is or is not present
• What the teacher and coach will discuss during a debrief meeting (i.e., reflection and feedback)
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ectacenter.org/decrp
Practice GuideDescription of the Practice
Video example of the Practice
Performing the Practice
Illustrative vignette
Recognizing success
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ectacenter.org/decrp
FOCUSED OBSERVATIONS support…
• What the coach will deliver feedback about
• What the coach and teacher will reflect on
• The teacher’s continued progress towards goals
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Key Ideas for FOCUSED OBSERVATION
• Includes gathering and recording information
• Observation focus is guided by current action plan
• Might also include providing additional support during time in classroom
What Makes an Observation “Focused”?
• Always includes:
• Gathering information guided by current action plan goal
• Recording information, being mindful about what you are seeing – take notes, reflect, begin to plan feedback
• Might also include:
• Providing targeted, hands‐on support or modeling during a live observation to help implement action plan goal by using other coaching strategies (e.g., prompting, gesturing, reflective conversation, problem‐solving)
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Why Focus?• Helps action plan “come alive” and become a
vehicle for reflection and feedback
• Helps you provide richer, more detailed feedback on specific action plan goals
• Goal is targeted behavior change
– Small steps work best
• Start your process of reflecting on what you saw
• Decide
• What support is needed next?
• What feedback are you going to provide?
–Supportive and constructive
• Any reminders needed for previously met goals?
During the Observation
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• Time spent• Observation• Debriefing
• Observation focus• What I observed• What I want to
share• Follow up needed
• Watch teacher and take detailed notes
• Collect data
• Engage in a problem‐solving discussion
• Engage in a reflective conversation
• Review goals
• Update action plan progress
• Provide supportive and constructive* performance feedback (verbal or graphic)
• Deliver side‐by‐side support (verbal or gestural)
• Model target practices
• Role‐play
• Videotape teacher
• Review teacher’s video
• Share a video demonstration
• Help teachers use / interpret data
• Provide materials or resources
• Modify environmental arrangement
• Provide other help in classroom
Coaching Strategies ‐ Observation
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Reflection and Feedback
• Supports the implementation of new practices
• Guides the precision of new practices
• Provides encouragement and support for the adult learner in the movement towards fluency
Who Reflects
• Teacher
– Guided by the coach to reflect on events, activities, efforts, child response, growth in practices, etc.
• Coach
– Observation of teacher effort, behavior, skills, activities and child response, etc.
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Format for Reflection and Feedback
• Open meeting (positive, social greeting)
• Summarize observation and encouragereflection
• Supportive performance feedback• Constructive performance feedback• Targeted support• Support for planned actions • End meeting
Reflection
• Encourage, affirm & acknowledge– Strengths-based
• Conversational & reciprocal– Open-ended prompts– Then provide structured feedback based on
reflection– Grounded in data/observation– Connected to action plan– Combine challenges and support
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Reflection Starter Phrases
• Objective Questions
– What happen when______?
– What have you tried with_____?
• Interpretive Questions
– Why do you think_____?
– What do you think would happen if_____?
• Comparative Questions
– Know that, what would you do next time_____?
– How did that compare to_____?
• Encourage, affirm & acknowledge–Strengths-based–Direct, specific, and nonattributive
• Conversational & reciprocal–But grounded in data/observation –Connected to action plan–Reflective questions can help
Feedback
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Types of feedback
• Supportive Feedback– Related to implementation of coached practices or
general positive aspects of teacher’s behavior; reference observation or action plan goal
• Constructive Feedback– Related to ways to improve implementation
precision, fluency, or match to child need• Data-based Feedback
– Provides feedback that is objective and anchored in the teacher’s practice
– Provides a measure of growth– Opens the door for a range of conversations
Nonattributive Feedback
• Attributive– You are so patient– You are so thoughtful– I love how creative you
are, the art activity was great
• NonAttributive– You waited 10 seconds for
Emily to get the puzzle piece in and when she did it, she was so proud
– I saw that you thanked your teaching assistant for helping several times. That provides a great model for the children
– Using the glitter with the paper flowers and photographs really kept all the children engaged in the activity
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• Watch teacher and take detailed notes
• Collect data
• Engage in a problem-solving discussion
• Engage in a reflective conversation
• Review goals
• Update action plan progress
• Provide performance feedback (verbal or graphic)
• Deliver side-by-side support (verbal or gestural)
• Model target practices
• Role-play
• Videotape teacher
• Review teacher’s video
• Share a video demonstration
• Help teachers use / interpret data
• Provide materials or resources
• Modify environmental arrangement
• Provide other help in classroom
Coaching Strategies - Debriefing
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Learning Lab:Exploring Coaching for Practice Change
May - August 2017
1. Implementing Coaching for Practice Change: Innovations for the delivery of coaching
o May 1: Information and Knowledge Developmento May 22: Follow-up discussion of issues and strategies
2. Coaching for Practice Change: Statewide implementation, systems considerations and examples
o June 12: Information and Knowledge Developmento June 19: Follow-up discussion of issues and strategies
3. Coaching for Practice Change: Considerations for local and regional programs
o July 24: Information and Knowledge Developmento July 31: Follow-up discussion of issues and strategies
4. Data Decision-Making and the Implementation of Practice-Based Coaching
o August 14: Information and Knowledge Developmento August 28: Follow-up discussion of issues and strategies
http://ectacenter.org/~calls/2017/learninglab.asp